On Wed 15 Mar 2017 at 16:07:31 (+0000), Adam Spiers wrote: > On 15 March 2017 at 14:33, Robert Schmaus <[email protected]> wrote: > > Am 15/03/2017 um 14:54 schrieb Adam Spiers: > >> On 15 March 2017 at 13:45, Robert Schmaus <[email protected]> wrote: > >>> How about this: > >>> > >>> \context { > >>> \Score > >>> proportionalNotationDuration = #(ly:make-moment 1/10) > >>> \override SpacingSpanner.uniform-stretching = ##t > >>> } > >> > >> That's what I was already trying ... > > > > I know - but in your file the proportionalNotationDuration was set to 64/256 > > ... with 1/10, the chords are placed furher apart. Maybe it's too far apart > > with 1/10 but with smaller font size, you can navigate to some value that's > > better. > > I tried with several different values, and beyond a certain fraction, > the results > were always the same, i.e. roughly proportional if barlines are omitted, and > hopelessly non-proportional if barlines are included :-/ > > _______________________________________________ > lilypond-user mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
I took your source and changed two things: a4 → a0 64/256 → 1/32 and it looks superficially ok to me. (It would have been nice to have a conventional score available as a crib. I'm not prepared to start comparing the source with the display.) Perhaps you just have a room problem. I've made limited use of proportional notation, very useful for certain pieces, but I would prefer the music to look like a proper score rather than have some rigorous mathematical constraint applied to the notes. So I've never expected the barlines in each system to line up exactly with the others. Cheers, David.
chd.pdf
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